All baby animals are easy to bond with...sort of a built in feature that causes their mothers to want to nurture them~even our own are cuter and more adorable in their baby years.
The trick is to remember that they aren't YOUR children...babies, yes, but not your babies. Feed, water and marvel over their little antics but avoid getting too maudlin and absorbed in their lives. I always love watching all my animals going about their lives, even the CX chicks...they are a hoot to raise and watch! You are their babysitter but
not the mama...it's a good thing to keep in your mind and heart.
All animals have a purpose on this Earth and I think most of us humans have lost track of the purpose of our animals...we tend to want to humanize them, keep them in our homes and deeply embedded in our daily lives. It becomes hard to be objective when a person views their animals in this way...and I find that a person gets a lot of grief from other people when they find that you can separate your feelings from your brain in this world today, in regards to animals.
Central Hatchery in NE has the cheapest CX chicks going this season, that I have found. The chicks are robust and arrive on time and healthy, with 4 extras in the shipment.
I'm feeding fermented feeds and am not following the traditional feeding/management of CX, so if you don't want to try new things with your first meat bird experiment, you might read on the other threads about how they do theirs. I am trying to eliminate the things that make the CX something that people call "dirty, smelly, Frankenchickens," and claim that they will only live to processing age and then develop health problems.
So far, so good....the last batch I raised were wonderfully healthy, clean, not expensive to raise and foraged right along side my layers.
This batch is doing well also...no stinky poops, no mobility problems, healthy as little horses.
Here is an excellent tutorial on here that everyone should read...very fine technique on the processing and the pics are beautiful, step by step and very thorough(not exactly how I do it in large volume, but still great for folks with just a few ):
https://www.backyardchickens.com/a/how-to-process-a-chicken-at-home
For an alternative story about CX methods, here is a thread with some interesting results:
https://www.backyardchickens.com/t/...raise-20-meaties-pics-of-the-finished-product
Alternative feeding methods:
https://www.backyardchickens.com/t/644300/fermenting-feed-for-meat-birds
Even cheap and alternative housing solutions:
https://www.backyardchickens.com/a/cattle-panel-hoop-coop