Readers’ travel photograph competition: July – landscapes Landscapes was a broad theme and you sent in some incredible scenes. Scroll through the gallery to see the winner, chosen by Colin Prior, one of the world's leading landscape photographers Tweet Andrew Moran Forsey: A pigeon with a head for heights debates its next move from the 86th-floor observation deck at the Empire State Building. The tall skyscrapers of lower Manhattan can be seen on the misty horizon. Photograph: Andrew Moran Forsey Jonathan Stokes: With some dunes reaching 150m tall, Erg Chebbi in Morocco certainly makes for an exciting and stunning backdrop for dirt biking. Algeria lies just beyond the horizon. Photograph: Jonathan Stokes Sebastien Degardin: On a road trip across Scotland, I had just arrived on the Isle of Skye when I discovered this amazing place, only 100m from the hotel at Neist Point. It was 8pm and the place was empty. Whales can sometimes be spotted here. Photograph: Sebastien Degardin Steven Jackson: My friend Charlie in Grantchester Meadows, Cambridge. Photograph: Steven Jackson Ryan Parkinson: Moored boats overlooked by Morecambe Bay sunset. Photograph: Ryan Parkinson Laura McGregor: A lone cottage, also known as a But 'n' Ben, sits at the foot of a mountain in Glen Coe, Scotland. Photograph: Laura McGregor Tracey Paddison: Surging tide and thundering waves wash over Bronte sea pool in Sydney, Australia. Taken at dawn. Photograph: Tracey Paddison Rory McDonald: This shot was taken at Waterhead, Ambleside, in the Lake District, on an early morning just as the mist was lifting. Photograph: Rory McDonald Robert Lenfert: This was taken along the Argyll coastal route, south of Inveraray. Even after many trips, the Scottish scenery never disappoints. Photograph: Robert Lenfert Lee Hutton: Monument Valley – as seen from the View Hotel in Utah, a place that certainly lives up to its name! Photograph: Lee Hutton Lydia Willgress: This photo was taken in Amboseli national park, Kenya. For me, watching these two wildebeest locking heads really forced home the notion of the survival of the fittest. I was completely captivated by them. Photograph: Lydia Willgress Mostafa Hamad: This photo is part of a time-lapse series taken in the mountains of northern Iraq. I took almost 1,500 images from 4pm until 3am and this was the final shot. Photograph: Mostafa Hamad Simon Smith, winner: This was the most striking berg of our journey. The ice had taken about 10 years to drift from an Antarctic glacier to the low-current waters off the north-eastern coast of South Georgia. Colin Prior, judge: This image really stood out for me, not so much for its monochrome qualities but because of the simplicity. It employs simple, powerful graphics, which help create a balanced composition, and the scale of the iceberg is obvious from the sight of the boat in the centre. Its an image that works, for me, on a number of levels, with each element in the photograph working together in harmony. An excellent example. Well done. Photograph: Simon Smith