One challenge with adopting this system is the time it takes before the Inga plot becomes fully productive – anywhere between 8 months and 2 years. It may be possible to some carefully selected crops earlier, e.g. beans if the soil and climate are favourable. Valuable firewood is also typically obtained long before the first proper harvest.
Initially getting the system under way takes hard work, but once the Inga is well established the farmer saves time and energy. In the first year, to establish the system, the farmer has to pre-slash the site to keep down the weeds, then plant the Inga, and then slash the weeds again round the young trees till they are fully established. There needs to be a clear area of about a metre round the base of each tree. This might come to over 100 man-days effort per hectare. However many farmers want to start much smaller than that, for example with a tenth of a hectare, and this makes the initial work more manageable. More land can be put under Inga alley cropping in subsequent years.
From the second year on the alley cropping system requires very much less work than slash and burn (about half the man hours), as there is very little weeding to be done. Moreover for slash and burn additional time is often used to walk to the most recently cleared plot. This can be as much as 2 or 3 hours per day – a very long commute. The alleys can be permanently sited next the farmer’s home and do not move, thus saving this time.