Abrams Trio Farms operates a residential training facility outside Oklahoma City's urban core, specializing in board-and-train programs that span 2 to 8 weeks for dogs requiring intensive behavior modification, obedience, or sport preparation. Unlike drop-off daycare or group classes, this model removes the dog from its home environment entirely, placing it under consistent handler supervision during training and boarding. The facility works primarily with owners who have time constraints, dogs with serious behavioral issues, or those pursuing competition titles in retriever and pointer sports.
A board-and-train program boards your dog full-time while trainers work with it daily according to a custom plan. The dog lives at the facility, sleeps there, and trains there, returning home only after the program concludes. This differs fundamentally from weekly group classes (where you attend with the dog) or daycare with incidental training (where the dog goes home the same day). Abrams Trio Farms keeps dogs on-site during the entire duration, which allows trainers to reinforce lessons across feeding, exercise, and downtime, not just during formal sessions.
The farm uses positive reinforcement with compliance-based methods suited to gun dogs and hunting breeds, reflecting its roots in retriever and pointer work. Programs are individualized; a dog arriving for basic obedience follows a different curriculum than one trained for field trials or behavioral rehabilitation. The facility typically structures days around morning training sessions, midday exercise, afternoon work, and evening routine, mimicking the repetition needed for lasting behavior change.
Program length ranges from 2 weeks (brief skill reinforcement) to 8 weeks (comprehensive behavioral overhaul), with pricing generally between $2,500 and $6,000 depending on intensity and duration. A standard 4-week board-and-train runs approximately $4,000 to $4,500. Call ahead to confirm current rates and discuss your dog's specific needs before enrolling; pricing can vary if your dog requires medication, has severe aggression, or needs specialized sport training.
Oklahoma City has multiple training paths. Group obedience classes at facilities like those offered through PetSmart or local independent trainers run $150 to $300 for a 6-week session, meeting once weekly; you attend and learn to handle your dog, but the dog returns home each night and progress depends on your daily practice. In-home private training with a certified trainer costs $75 to $150 per hour and works well for addressing specific behaviors without disrupting the dog's routine, but requires owner participation and takes longer to resolve serious issues. Boarding-only facilities (without training) charge $30 to $60 per night and provide care and exercise but no behavior work.
Board-and-train is the choice when you need intensive, handler-led intervention without owner training sessions, when a dog has behavioral problems that require constant supervision, or when preparing for competition. It costs more upfront than classes but compresses progress into weeks rather than months, and removes the variable of inconsistent home practice. It suits owners with time or skill limitations, dogs with aggression or severe anxiety, and those targeting specific field or sport goals. It does not suit owners who want to learn handling skills alongside their dog or whose dogs need minimal behavioral work.
Ideal candidates include owners of young gun dogs needing foundational training before field use, dogs with resource guarding or aggression that require expert intervention, and retrievers or pointers being trained for hunt tests or field trials. It also works for dogs whose owners travel frequently or have unpredictable schedules and cannot maintain daily training consistency.
Poor fits include owners wanting to develop handling skills themselves, dogs with mild behavioral quirks that respond to weekly classes, and owners uncomfortable separating from their dogs for extended periods. Some dogs also struggle with the stress of relocation; anxious dogs may need a slower introduction or shorter programs.
Owners typically begin with a phone consultation describing the dog's age, breed, behavior history, and specific goals. Abrams Trio Farms will outline a recommended program length and method, discuss any medical or behavioral red flags, and explain the owner's role during and after training. Some facilities require a trial board-and-train (shorter, 2-week program) before committing to longer terms, allowing both the facility and dog to establish fit. Expect to provide vaccination records and discuss pickup and handover procedures, including a handler education session at the end so you can maintain trained behaviors at home.
Abrams Trio Farms is located outside Oklahoma City proper, typically requiring a 20 to 40-minute drive from central areas depending on your location. Contact the facility directly for exact address, hours for drop-off and pickup, and whether they require appointments. Most board-and-train facilities accept pickups and drop-offs during limited windows (often weekend mornings); plan accordingly.
Abrams Trio Farms fills a specialized niche in Oklahoma City's pet training market: owners needing intensive, residential behavior work without the time investment of weekly classes or the limited scope of daycare.
