Your suggestions well noted...Thank youLooks great, but 2 things i notice right away....#1 is how dark it is on the lower right....it is distracting, and takes away from the image...if it is something that cannot be fixed, try cropping it "portrait" and using just the left side where the trees and clouds are (focal points). There doesn't seem to be much to look at on the right side of the image anyway.
#2, clean your lens. I see several "splotches" throughout the sky...the most noticable is right in the clouds...These could also be birds....with multiple exposures birds can look like blotches....You can always clone these out in photoshop, either way.
nice job on the first attempt though! It takes some practice.
Thanks for your suggestions, in that case can you pls suggest which snaps should I merge from +3, +2, +1, 0, -1 ,-2 ,-3? I will select those exposures and do the HDR merge and will update in the forum for my understanding...You may have the HDR "strength" slider set to high which can result in parts of the shot being "over cooked". Also try using fewer shots. You also have to remember that HDR is most effective in high contrast scenes, very dark shadows and bright highlights. If what you are shooting is more to the flat side then a smaller f/stop range works better. Your shot goes from +3 to -3. In a scene like this try shooting one stop up, one normal, and one stop down. With HDR "more" is not necessarily better.
That looks better. Try other combinations. Play with the settings. That's the way to learn to get the HDR you want.
Thank you for your comments, Iam really happy to be a member of this forum. Your critics make me learn new things...Yes, that looks much better.......even better than the one I did of yours. Using 3 exposures is the way to go. Like Joseph said, keep playing with the exposutes with 3 shots, and you will see something you like.