Not all plans are stored in the AWR. Generally, though, all the plans that you're interested in are. Few people are interested in tracking changes to query plans for queries that don't consume a lot of resources in a particular snapshot window. They're generally only interested in the behavior of the top resource consumers. You can adjust the N in the top N queries that AWR captures with each snapshot.
If you're looking at a single database, the simplest option is to keep data in the AWR as long as you're likely to need it. If you want data back beyond 10 days, the simplest option is to increase your AWR retention. AWR data doesn't consume that much disk space so it's generally easier to let Oracle retain more data than to write anything of your own.
Sometimes, people configure replication processes that take AWR data from many individual databases and write them to a single central database. That requires a decent amount of setup but it makes it much easier to compare information across databases (either to compare data among dev/ test/ staging/ production environments or to compare across multiple client-specific instances).
select * from table(dbms_xplan.display_awr_cursor(sql_id => 'a_sql_id'));