mryan75 must live on an island!
More seriously, as RyanB said, fly further. After all, the purpose of the limitations of log able cross country flight is to assure that you are actually going to new, unfamiliar places.
3 months and 2 days after the PPL check ride, I flew 13 hours and 20 minutes, about 1600 NM, to Florida and return.
One grass strip, 4 towered airports, and learned many new things, such as not all airports with a visible gas pump sell to the public, and it was Jet A to boot.
There were 3 legs shorter than an hour, dealing with weather issues safely, and that fuel stop with Jet A only.
The remark on one leg is "Black velvet night". Flying north on the east coast of Florida with a full sky of stars, and not a ripple in the air.
Another "Double rainbow after cold front passage" at Ridgeland airport, Ga, as we finished our sandwiches in a hanger with a local guy that was building a 4/5 scale Zero fighter for movies. He was our host when we paused for that front to pass.
None of these things happen on what are truly long local flights on days that are forecast to remain VFR all day. The cross country requirements are supposed to document actual unfamiliar conditions and coping with changing weather.