To me, the picture came out as a big question mark. What is the person who's trying to show in the scene? Is it the dark greyish sky? Is it the emerging rock on the bottom right hand corner? Is it the row of sticks sticking out in a orderly manner leading from the left to the right? Or is it the lone stick that sit in front of the fence? Or maybe it's the horizon apparently "caged" on the other side of the "fence"?
I think it's a common phenomenon most are facing these days. When one have the ability to take a lot of pictures, one would inevitably be more forgetful of how the scene actually look through the viewfinder, what the intention of the picture was when one hold down the trigger. Think hard. What exactly was going through your mind when you were shooting the scene? What was your main intention in the photograph?
Once you manage to establish your intention, work on that subject(s) by either framing it to enhance it's visibility (crop if need be) or dramatise it (postprocessing). As it is, the picture is a simple case of wanting to capture everything, but dramatically failed to bring any of the subject out. My suggestion would be, to throw away the grey sky, make the landscape landscape format, and work on the contrast of the fence.