If you need more range, go to a 6-meter or even 10-meter mobile. Our county used to use low-band VHF radios for fire communications, operating right around 33 MHz. The radios were expensive, and even the handheld antennas were approaching 2' long- not something you want hanging out of your turnout gear inside a structure fire! But it did work in our hilly terrain, and you should never kick a running horse, so that system remained for 30 years or more. They then transitioned to high-band VHF, which worked after a fashion with the addition of some more repeaters and remote receivers. Then in the early 2000's, the state decided to adopt an 800 MHz digital system for "Statewide Radio". They originally planned for 40+ sites in our county, which is laughable given our terrain. I did NOT make friends or fans when I pointed this out in a state EMA conference, but I was entirely correct. They ended up with over 100 sites, and the coverage is still not suitable for reliable emergency use. That and the project went tens of millions of dollars over-budget, and the radio company went belly-up soon after. Now they're replacing it with a P25 system, which has the exact same issues, but more available equipment. Luckily our county kept the VHF system and has even made a few improvements, so coverage is good.
My whole point in this diatribe is that there is no magic with radio, UHF and above is pretty much line-of-sight, so unless you live in an are that's so flat you can watch your dog run away for 2 weeks, you'll be limited in range to a few miles. Alinco still makes a 6-meter FM mobile, and there are lots of 10-meter mobiles available, most of which are multi-mode.