Heartland’s Amber Marshall: A Decade of Amy Fleming and Ranch Life
When Amber Marshall first stepped into Amy Flemingâs boots, she couldnât have imagined sheâd still be riding alongside her fifteen years later. But Heartland, CBCâs quietly powerful family drama, didnât just survive. It became a national stapleâthanks, in no small part, to the woman at its center.
âAmyâs had a pretty tough life,â Amber says, sitting comfortably on her Alberta ranch. âShe lost her mom in the very first episode. That kind of grief doesnât just go away. It shapes who she becomes.â
Itâs that emotional honesty thatâs kept viewers tethered to Amyâs story. Through heartbreak, healing, and moments of quiet strength, Marshall has carried the character through 266 episodesâand counting.
Playing Through the Pain
One storyline that stuck with her? The arc where Amy loses her sight.
âPortraying that fear⌠the uncertainty of ever seeing againâit was tough,â Amber admits. âHer sight is everything to her. That episode really made me stop and think.â

She doesnât overplay the drama. Thatâs never been Heartlandâs style. But the emotional weight? It’s real. And it’s lived with her, long after the cameras cut.
More Than a Set â A Lifestyle
Filming long days in Albertaâs unpredictable climate has its demands, but Amber doesnât just clock out and head to the city. Her real home is a 100-acre ranch near High River, where the lifestyle mirrors Amyâs more than fans might expect.
âChores are my way to unwind,â she says. âFeeding the animals, watching the horses graze⌠it’s a rhythm I love.â
Her six horsesâCash, Hawk, Cinch, Nitro, and two miniatures, Talon and Screechâarenât just pets. Theyâre part of the family. And on a good evening, youâll find her riding bareback into the sunset, no script in sight.
The ranch isnât quiet either. Cats, chickens, pigs, cowsâthey all have their place.
âItâs a lot of responsibility,â Amber says, âbut itâs also a lot of joy. It keeps me grounded.â
Behind the Scenes, Sheâs the Horse Expert
Amberâs title may be âactress,â but sheâs also a consulting producerâand that role matters. Especially when horses are involved.

âThe writers are often city folks,â she explains. âSo Iâll step in and say, âThat wouldnât work with a real horse,â or âThis might be unsafe.â Itâs about protecting the animals, and keeping it real.â
And yes, that includes her own animals. Her pony, Talon, even played a rescued horse on the show.
âMaking him look starved was hilarious,â she laughs. âHeâs round by natureâhe loves snacks and attention.â
Sheâs also picked up advanced training techniques during her time on set. Liberty work in Season 5 was a turning point.
âWorking with Nikki Flundra taught me so much. It made me a better horsewomanânot just for the show, but in real life.â
Amy Fleming, Then and Now

When a show runs as long as Heartland, it risks going stale. But Amy hasnât. Thatâs something Amberâs proud of.
âTheyâve let her grow. Get married. Have a child. Mourn. Move forward. Thatâs rare in television.â
Sheâs not playing the same Amy she was at 18. And maybe thatâs why fans are still watching.
âIt feels natural,â she adds. âThereâs always more to explore. Amy still surprises me.â
A Role That Became Something More
Amber Marshall didnât just play a horse whisperer. Over the years, she became one. And while fame was never the goal, itâs clear sheâs found something far more meaningful.
A life of balance. A character that keeps evolving. And a ranch thatâs not just homeâitâs a reflection of everything Heartland stands for.
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