(Ptyas dhumnades)
Large snake; total length up to 220 cm. There are 11-16 (16 at mid-body) rows of scales, which are keeled around the vertebral line. Head is oval to slightly triangular, and moderately separated from neck; body is slender and tail is long. Eye is very large; iris is dark gray to black dappled dirty yellow to tan and pupil is round, black, surrounded by ring of dirty yellow. There is a well-developed supraocular and a ridge from eye to nostril. Tongue is large, gray against dark red, and fork tips are darker gray or even black. Upper head is usually olive gray to dark gray with narrow margins of black on scutes; the sides are lighter in color. There is a yellow to yellow gray stripe, involving two scale rows on the vertebral line, and from neck to a point beyond mid-body. The vertebral line is bordered by prominent black longitudinal lines, which also fade near mid-body; the lines followed ventrally by second less distinct longitudinal yellow gray line, then a narrower line of black, and finally a yellow gray line just above latero-ventral junction. Upper body is striped from neck to tail in the young. Ventral head and neck are white to gray. Ventral body is light anteriorly, progressively darker gray or blue gray posterioly, and tinged with dirty yelow. Anal scale is divided and subcaudals are paired and distinct due to dark borders.