A woman who considers herself Andrea Giesbrecht's best friend testified Wednesday at her trial.

Giesbrecht is accused of storing the remains of six infants in a U-Haul storage locker.

READ MORE: Trial begins for woman accused of hiding remains of 6 infants in storage locker

Liezl Collins told court she met Giesbrecht in 2005, when the two women worked together at a group home in St. Vital.

She said they became close friends shortly after, spending time together, having coffee, going to movies and shopping with their kids.

Collins testified she visited Giesbrecht's home and watched TV shows with her.

She told court she drove Giesbrecht to her storage locker at Sentinel Storage to pay an overdue bill sometime between 2006 and 2008, and then once again after that.

Collins said Giesbrecht told her she had to make a payment.

"Did you know what was in storage?" asked Crown attorney Sharyl Thomas.

"Boxes of her father's things," Collins said.

READ MORE: Son testifies in trial for mom accused of hiding the remains of six infants

Collins testified she was never given a password to enter the storage facility and never went inside the unit.

She said Giesbrecht eventually moved the contents to a different storage unit at U-Haul. She told court she drove Giesbrecht to U-Haul, so she could open an account.

"Who moved her possessions from Sentinel to U-Haul?" Thomas asked.

"She did it herself,” Collins testified.

She explained she offered to help, but Giesbrecht told her she could do it herself.

Collins said she never knew Giesbrecht was pregnant and did not know she had abortions.

Back in April, the trial heard Giesbrecht had 10 legally-induced abortions from 1994-2011.

"That completely floored me," Collins said. "I had no clue."

She said she hasn't seen Giesbrecht since her arrest in October 2014.

READ MORE: Woman accused of hiding baby remains may have had pregnancy troubles: lawyer

Earlier in the day Patricia Caetano, the executive director of provincial drug programs for Manitoba Health, told the court Giesbrecht was prescribed birth control pills by a doctor in 1994.

Gayle Martens, the executive director of Fee-For-Service and Insured Benefits for Manitoba Health, testified about Giesbrecht's history of doctor visits.

Martens said court records show Giesbrecht had multiple legally-induced abortions, including three in 1994, when she was 20-years-old.

Under cross-examination, Martens was asked if any of the doctor visits were related to self-induced abortion. Martens said the records don't track that sort of thing.

Giesbrecht's husband will take the stand Wednesday afternoon.