Please read my hindsight is 20/20 thread. If they are not keeping the baby warm and no feeding has occurred by 12 hrs (or less if not sitting on baby) you will need to hand feed and put baby in a brooder. Make a brooder with food container with air holes, heating pad, towels, and thermometer. I had to keep my baby conures warm initially at 92 to 96 degrees. Humidity must be >50% and if your house is dry, you can add a water cup in there to increase humidity. The temperature requirement goes down as they mature.
Pet stores carry bird formula, usually Kaytee Exact. It it will do for now, but I prefer Roudybush since it easy to mix, far less grainy, and doesnât clog syringes. Babies donât have to feed for several hours after hatching as the yolk still provides some nutrition. For now, use a VERY small spoon to feed the baby with a watered down formula. Watch you tube if you havenât done this before. Later, a âtonsil irrigatorâ type syringe works great. Do not attempt crop feeding until you are more experienced and the babies are larger. They will lap up the formula from the spoon or syringe in their mouths. Formula should be warm (they have temp guidelines but the optimal is so close to crop-burn temp, that warm is just fine).
At this stage they require every 2 hour hand feedings so it will be rough for the first week! I am attaching Kevinâs 3 week old pic from today.
First clutch failure is very common with psittacines. Mine was supposed to be a âno clutchâ as Angelo (the mom) was supposed to be a DNA sexed male. But here I am. Kevin is exactly 3 weeks old today. Hazel is 3.5 weeks. Their sibling died yesterday unexpectedly. We can only try our best and see what happens. I had experience hand feeding budgies several years ago so I already knew to have everything ready on hand, just in case. Honestly, I didnât think I would have to go through with it!
Iâve attached a picture of the spoons/syringe, Kevin on day of hatch and today, and my homemade brooder set up. I recently did try to buy a brooder off Amazon, but the chemical smell was so bad I didnât want to chance it.
Good luck! No matter what happens, just know you did your best and thatâs all we can do.