1. You learn to recognize moisture peaks in the IR very quickly. The peaks are present in the range you mentioned. But, unlike normal peaks, moisture peaks are very broad.
You can look up the spectrum of water in most IR books. If you can't find the spectrum, put a very small amount of water on salt plates (NaCl, not KBr) and run an IR. Most professors do not like this approach, because the water will dissolve the salt plates. So only use a very small amount of water.
2. You need some method for putting the sample in the IR beam. You will find a number of those, including plastic support films, nujol mull on salt plates (KBr or NaCl), etc. The usual problem-there is way too much sample (sometimes you will be told the sample is too thick). This gives a very poor (and very hard to interpret ) IR spectrum. The answer, in your case, is to dilute the sample with KBr and then run the sample.
Hope this helps...