Bûches is a French equivalent of the English phrase "log flume." The pronunciation of the feminine plural noun -- which references an amusement park entertainment involving riding through a curving water trail in hollow-out logs and which translates literally as "logs" -- will be "byoosh" in French.
Le Scoot Log Flume was created in 1965.
In French it is called "La Bûche de Noël" and it is translated to "Christmas Log" in English.
1963
While my dad was driving, we saw a small a small flume leading to the ocean.
with paper, glue and scissors.
The log flume is just a little engineered "river" to float the logs down an incline in. The flumes were mostly built of wood, and they extended for miles. There were some people who rode the logs along these flumes! A link is provided to the Wikipedia article on the log flume, and there is a nice pic from back in the day.
A flume is a man made channel for moving water. "At the amusement park, we rode on the log flume, and we got soaked with water. ".
for the flume, use bamboo halves or PVC water pipes. for the support you can use just about anything.
Very fast!
big and huge
It might still be Logs Leap in England.Hope it helps :)
yes in Congo rapids and in the log flume