Soldato
I'm a week behind you, just got back from a few days in Windemere. Did you go along the Honister Pass whilst in Buttermere? That's one amazing road!
Ice does make for some awesome shots
https://farm8.staticflickr.com/7684/17063970542_e5211a42da_b.jpg
Recently got a DSLR and into photography and this was really my first attempt at landscape.
The hardest thing to learn in landscape photography is composition.
In this photo the horizon line is right in the middle so there is an equal weighting to both the foreground and sky, without anything obvious to draw attention to. Such a 50-50 spit works well for some photos for example reflections in lakes because the composition enhances the sense of symmetry.
However in you photos I think you probably want to have much less sky and more foreground, the rough rule of thumb is something like 1/5th sky to 4/5th land. Of course if the sky is super interesting and the main subject you want to swap that over.
The other thing about landscapes is you really want to be looking for leading lines that can draw the viewer in to the subject. look for roads, fences, hedges, walls, rivers, streams etc. that can guide the viewer from up lose to far away, and hopefully to some focal pint like a distant mountain, or a bright sun. The lines don' need to be straight, the classic S-curve of a river is just as powerful and more pleasing