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Leguminose
Leguminose
  • Intercropping
  • The project
    • Our goals
    • Our approach
    • Impact
    • Partner organisations
    • Related initiatives
    • People
    • Industrial Advisory Board (IAB)
  • Tool
  • Research fields
    • Asendorf, DE
    • Cesa Estate, IT
    • Foulum, DK
    • Madrid, ES
    • Osiny, PL
    • Reading, UK
    • Šumperk, CZ
  • News and events
  • Resources
  • Contact

Denmark

Farmer standing in a lush, diverse field of crops, gesturing with his hands while speaking; overlaid text reads “Stop Fighting Nature.”

Legume-cereal intercropping in practice: A Danish farmer’s experience

14 April 2026

A Danish farmer shares his experience testing legume–cereal intercropping, balancing soil health, crop performance, and farm economics.

Categories Article Tags article, Denmark
Grassland

Intercropping can ensure sustainability and food security

12 February 202420 March 2023

Our partners at Aarhus University summarise the goals and approach of LEGUMINOSE in a press release.

Categories Press release Tags Denmark, press release

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Recent Posts

  • How legume-cereal intercropping can support more sustainable farming in Pakistan 28 May 2026
  • Summer school on soil health and intercropping in Florence, Italy 24 April 2026
  • Legume-cereal intercropping in practice: A Danish farmer’s experience 14 April 2026
  • Summer school on modelling intercropping systems in Vienna, Austria 9 February 2026
  • Legume-cereal intercropping in practice: Insights from a regenerative farm in the UK 27 January 2026

The LEGUMINOSE project will provide science-based, farmer-led, and economically viable systems and techniques for legume-based intercropping.

Funded by the
European Union

This work has received funding from UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) under the UK government’s Horizon Europe funding guarantee [grant numbers 10057156 and 10039837] to the Soil Association and the University of Reading.

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