Well, congrats on the little egg hatching! I went out online, and found this:
Brooder
I built my own brooder from stuff around the house. It would be nice to have a real brooder but they are very expensive, and I am only an enthusiastic hobbyist.
Material list:
A bowl, small aquarium, or plastic carrying case. I have used a shoebox in the past with no problems.
A heating pad (set on low)
A small plastic bowl or Canary nest
A washcloth
A small glass of water
Something to measure temp (Keep the temp around 98 degrees)
Many Kleenex's and paper towels
Place the heating pad in the box, or around the shoe box so it covers the bottom and at least some of the sides. Add in the small bowl or Canary nest with a Kleenex to help soak up the droppings. The small glass of water is also kept inside in the makeshift incubator to add the much needed humidity. As the water evaporates add more. Place a thermometer in the incubator and place the lid gently on top. It works best if there is a half an inch on each side of the lid left open so air can circulate. Give it time to warm up and check the temperature. Keeping the temperature 96 to 99 degrees is best for young finches but should be slowly lowered as the chick grows feathers.
I used the wash cloth to adjust the height of the bowl/nest inside the brooder, this allowed me to more finely tune the temperature for the chick as it grew.
EDIT: Here is a pic of the brooder this lady made:
![]()
Hand Feeding Formula
Lafeber's Instant NutriStart hand feeding formula mixed with Gerber's Rice Cereal with Applesauce and water or Pedialyte worked the best for raising my finches. The Bird Care Co. also has a nice hand feeding mix called Gold Label Hand Rearing Formula which works very well. I used a small Oral Tipped Syringe for the feedings. narrow or long tip made feeding the zebra chick easier.
If you have a chick that is 1 to 8 days of age, you may need to use the flat end of a flat tooth pick. The syringe will not work for anything that small. It is best to just let the chick have one small drop at a time and swallow the food on its own.
Mix the ingredients into a thin yogurt like texture for younger chicks and thickening it slightly as the chick grows. Make fresh food for every feeding and clean the syringe thoroughly after every use. Also never force feed a chick, the risk of aspirating is too great.
I hope that helps!! Good luck to you and your baby finch!!
Steph and Splinter






Reply With Quote

I would let them handle it and unless you see the chick is being ignored/unfed, *then* I would intervene. Good Luck! They're very cute, rat-looking things at this stage


Bookmarks