I live in Hythe too or just down the road in Sandgate about 2 miles from the centre of Folkestone, so hi neighbour LOL
I was sound asleep in bed when everything started shaking violently. First of all I thought that it may be another second world war bomb which has exploded in the English Channel, which has happened before, but it continued for too long. I was pretty shaken up, and felt nauseous for a short while. I remember thinking that if the building is going to collapse then I wouldn't have enough time to escape anyway, and then it stopped. Neighbours all appeared in the streets in their pyjamas, and started talking and using their mobiles.
I heard numerous emergency sirens, burgler alarms etc etc.
Apparently all supermarkets are closed as are petrol stations. Our power has now returned. Friends are calling to check that I'm Ok, and one friend in the centre of Folkestone has cracks in her walls, and her chimney has been destroyed. Not an experience that I hope to repeat.
Carolyn
Thanks for the report,

wish you all the best
LATEST BBC NEWS
Earthquake shakes parts of Kent
An earthquake with a magnitude of at least 4.3 has shaken parts of Kent, damaging buildings and disrupting electricity supplies.
Emergency services have received reports of structural damage including cracked walls and fallen chimneys in Folkestone and nearby areas.
The British Geological Survey said the tremor, which occurred at 0818 BST, had its epicentre out in the Dover Straits.
It said this was the largest UK quake since one in 2002 in the West Midlands.
The earthquake was reportedly felt as far afield as Essex, East Sussex and Suffolk.
EDF Energy said it had managed to restore electricity to most of the several thousand homes left without power in the Folkestone and Dover area.
Scottish and Southern Energy, which supplies gas to the area, said it was investigating 300 "possible gas escapes".
"Obviously there is a smell about and people have been reporting it and we have to attend every single report," a spokesman.
"But at the moment we are not sure if it is natural gas brought up by the earthquake, which can happen, or leaks from pipes."
Significant tremor
David Booth of the British Geological Survey said the tremor, which lasted a few seconds, was of a sizeable magnitude.
"It's certainly the largest in the UK since an earthquake in Dudley in the West Midlands in 2002 and that also caused damage. So this is a very significant tremor."
Dr Brian Baptie, also of the British Geological Survey, told BBC News 24 that the epicentre was seven miles (12km) south of Dover, out in the English Channel.
Randy Baldwin from the US Geological Survey, which monitors earthquakes, said the tremor had a preliminary magnitude of 4.7.
Kent Fire and Rescue Service said it had received more than a 100 emergency calls and was having to deal with "several incidents".
Most of these were reports of structural damage, but a fire engine had also been sent to Folkestone to investigate a "smell of gas".
A Eurostar spokesman said everything was running normally in the Channel Tunnel.
Violent shaking
Sharon Hayles, from Stanford near the Eurotunnel terminal at Folkestone, said her house slid from side to side for about 10 to 15 seconds.
Another Folkestone man told BBC Five Live Breakfast that his whole house "shook quite violently".
Eyewitness Lorraine Muir said: "We've been evacuated by the Sally Army; we've got no gas or electricity."
Paul Smye-Rumsby, who lives in Dover, said: "It was about 08.15 when suddenly the bed shook violently.
"I thought my wife had got cramp or something but then I saw the curtains were moving and the whole house was shaking. It lasted about 1.5 seconds.
"All the power is off and we have got the portable radio on. People are standing outside talking to each other about it."
Quakes in the UK
December 2006 - Dumfries and Galloway (3.5 on Richter scale)
2002 in Warwick (4.2)
September 2002 - Dudley, West Midlands (5.0)
October 2001 - Melton Mowbray (4.1)
April 1990 - Bishop's Castle, Shropshire (5.1)
July 1984 - Nefyn, north Wales (5.4)
June 1931 - in North Sea near Great Yarmouth (6.1)