Now you should have a finished scene. The only problem is, it's a picture of nothing. There is no focal point. It's just an empty scene waiting for more stamps.  This is where the littles come in handy. I don't think you can ever have enough of these little things that make a scene interesting to the viewer.

I left an opening in the bottom of the scene because we don't have a dramatic object to pull the viewer into the scene and give their eyes somewhere to begin. The opening at the bottom makes the eye start there. In the lion scene is I closed in the bottom so the viewer's eyes would be held in longer. 
I know this probably just my imagination but I thought you might like to know the reason.

The right side of the scene is heavier because of the sun on that side and more palm fronds. I'm going to put my spear fisherman on the left to balance with the sun. I wanted the birds to be pointing towards the spearman but eyeballed it wrong. I think it would look better if the birds came from the sun rays towards the spearman because it would have directed your eyes to him. Everything else is pointing to him. The waves from the rocks below him, The palm fronds on top, the beach below him has less fronds so that pulls the eyes to the pebbles that are showing and then out the bottom.

The opening in the bottom makes the viewer start there. The sun is the most dramatic element so the eyes go to the right. Birds placed correctly would move the viewer around the picture to the spearman, insuring that the viewer actually saw the whole scene before his eyes were ready to leave.

This is the "Hokey" page that won't be here long.

Now back to the last picture.