What's a cookie?
A small file a website saves on your device to remember things — whether you're logged in, what you've looked at, or to count how many visitors arrived this week. Most of the internet uses them. We use a handful.
What we set on this site
| Name | Purpose | Provider | Expires |
|---|---|---|---|
| _ga | Tells Google Analytics which visits come from the same person | Google Analytics | 2 years |
| _ga_* | Maintains session state for analytics | Google Analytics | 2 years |
| kd-prefs | Remembers whether you've dismissed our cookie banner | Knott Digital | 1 year |
On sites we build for clients, we set the same Google Analytics cookies, plus any that the client specifically asks us to add (e.g. Meta Pixel, Google Ads). Those will appear in the client site's own cookie notice.
How to control them
You can block or delete cookies in your browser's settings. That won't stop the site working — everything here is browsable without cookies. You just won't appear in our visitor analytics, which is fine.
To opt out of Google Analytics specifically, Google publishes a browser add-on that does it across every site you visit.
What we don't do
- No advertising cookies
- No cross-site tracking
- No data sold or shared with ad networks
- No cookies from services we don't actually use
Questions: [email protected].