Observations were made following single I.V. injections or during continuous I.V. infusions of sulphobromophthalein (BSP) in three Jersey calves (3-5 months of age) which had an indwelling hepatic vein catheter, surgically implanted under general anaesthesia. Simultaneous sampling of blood from a peripheral (jugular) vein and an hepatic vein enabled calculations of hepatic plasma flow (E.H.P.F.) based on the Fick principle. Estimates of E.H.P.F. in nine single injection experiments gave a mean flow of 38.6 ml X min-1 X kg-1 compared to 32.6 ml X min-1 X kg-1 estimated in seven continuous infusion experiments. The over-all mean haematocrit in the three calves was 30.0% and the E.H.P.F. values are equivalent to hepatic blood flows of 55 and 47 ml X min-1 X kg-1 respectively. In thirteen out of fourteen experiments the plasma clearance of BSP in jugular vein blood after a single I.V. injection of 5 mg BSP X kg-1 body weight was best fitted by a double exponential model of distribution of BSP. Parameters from these exponentials were used to calculate E.H.P.F. by the method of Clarkson, Hardy-Smith & Richards (1976) and gave values of 11.3 ml X min-1 X kg-1, clearly indicating that the method cannot be applied in conscious calves.