TROMPO GAME
A Trompo or Whipping Top is a toy popular in Latin America
much like a top. Its name can vary between countries.
In Spain it is known as "peonza" or "trompo". Trompos
have a pear-shaped body and are usually made of wood,
although new resins and strong plastic materials have
also been used.
The trompo seen in this picture is exactly like a top which
has been made in Sasebo, Japan for hundreds of years.
It is believed that the tops used in Mexico were brought
over from Japan. In Japan the name for a top is called
a Koma. Most cities in Japan have a particular design
for their koma.
A trompo has a button-shaped tip on top, usually
bigger than the tip on which trompo spins, and generally
made of the same material as the rest of the body. This
tip exists so that the trompo can spin on the metal-made
tip when thrown.
Playing with a trompo consists of throwing the "trompo" and
having it spin on the floor. Because of its shape, a trompo
spins on its axis and swirls around its conic tip which is
usually made of iron or steel. A trompo uses a string wrapped
around it to get the necessary spin needed. The player
must roll the cord around the trompo from the metallic tip up.
The user must then tie the string in a knot on the button-
shaped tip before releasing it. When rolling the cord around
the trompo it must be done so that the cord is tightly attached
to it. The technique for throwing a trompo varies. One end of
the cord must be rolled around the player's fingers and with the same hand the trompo must be held with the metallic tip facing upwards.
Championships are held in different Latin American countries,
especially in Chile, Mexico, Colombia, Peru, Cuba and Nicaragua
where it is very popular among children of the middle and
lower classes.
In Puerto Rico, one of the ways trompos are played is similar
to playing marbles, with trompos being within a circle drawn
on sand, the object being to knock them out of the circle,
this can be played for keeps or otherwise. Failure to spin
or spin within the circle causes your trompo to be added
to it and another person has a turn to spin. Frequently,
trompos in Puerto Rico and Chile are modified to have a
sharper point, where in a game the object can be to split the
other players trompo.