About 10 or so years ago, my husband came in with a bucket of varying size eggs in them. He had brush hogged a field and noticed them on the ground. He said he thought they were turkey and quail. I stuck them on mildly crinkled newspaper and put a clear white heat lamp over them. I used no thermometer, no spare humidity. We used wood heater for heat maybe 4 foot from them. They were at the edge of a poorly sealed sliding back trailer house door. I just felt to see that they were warm. I didn't intentionally turn them or candle them. I don't remember how long it took(seems like a week for the turkeys and maybe 8 or 9 days for the quail) but 7 of 13 turkey eggs hatched and all 3 quails hatched. I had kept the quails separate and remember that we kept them separate in a in a shoe box near the light. We handled those frequently because they were so tiny that they fascinated the kids. The quails lived only a few days and pecked each others feet. My husband wanted to "burn" their beaks with a hot pocket knife blade because he said we were supposed to to keep them from pecking each other. I refused. I kept the turkeys in the aquarium and didn't know not to keep them on newspaper. They pooped on the paper and got it water wet walking through the saucer of water. Some died. Some spraddle legged and I didn't know how to fix it. Three lived to adolescence and he built a cage for them. He lapped the chicken wire over a frame over and over. He didn't put wire across the bottom. The first night we put them out, a raccoon dug in and killed all three. Many lessons there. As a kid, my grandparents had a huge several hundred egg, incubator. the only thing I remembered for sure was to feed the chicks crushed dry oats. I have begun to keep chickens in the last couple of years, after research and more trial and error, we incubate and raise chicks(chickens and ducks only) successfully. Our biggest issues have been varmints. There's no substitute for experience.