I agree with flowerbh if you can find it. If not, you just have to mix wet kitten food with chopped up mealworms and a small amount of water. You can feed the baby birds by using small tweezers. I found out that when chickadees hatch their mother gives them an enzyme to help with their immune system. If they don't receive it they do die young. I am not sure if robins are the same. Keep me posted on the growth. My chickadee eggs died at day 8. Full term is 12 days. It was sad. But I'm glad it happened because I don't have that enzyme. Lol!Yesterday my wife found a beautiful little robin's egg laying in the grass at the edge of her aunt's yard. I candled it and checked it for cracks and couldn't find any reason for it to have been discarded by the parent birds. We are 90% sure that it was not there earlier in the day. It must have fell from the nest by accident, luckily it landed in thick grass and is undamaged. I know it is probably silly to think that I can successfully raise a robin chick, I may have trouble with the whole regurgitating food thing. Has anyone ever tried to hatch or raise a wild songbird, any advice? I read online that they hatch in 12 to 14 days, I put it in the incubator that I am using as a hatcher at 100 degrees. The first thing that I thought when I saw that egg was, " Wouldn't it be cool to..." COUNSELING, That's what I need.I guess I have to turn it myself, I wish I had quail racks for one of my turners.